Owen, St. John (b. 1916)
St. John Owen (15 May 1916 (?)- ) is the leading Ojibwe (Anishinabe) pastor of the Pauingassi Mennonite Church in Manitoba. Together with his brother Jacob and cousin Spoot, St. John was ordained to the ministry in 1972. When the sponsoring mission board, Mennonite Pioneer Mission, indicated their interest in having a local indigenous pastor ordained, the local congregation responded by nominating first the above three, then adding a fourth, David Owen, brother to Spoot. All four served as pastors, with St. John giving the overall leadership and officiating at baptisms, weddings, and funerals. Jacob died on 8 December 1996 and Spoot on 13 March 1997. As of 1998, David and St. John continued to minister, although St. John's successor, Peter Keeper, has already been identified and annointed.
St. John Owen came to the faith following a series of Bible studies conducted by a Mennonite missionary, Dave Burkholder of the Northern Light Gospel Mission and an Ojibwe (Anishinabe) local leader, Sam Quill of Pikangikum, Ontario. Although St. John did not make his commitment overtly at the meetings, he did so when he entered the workshop of missionary Henry Neufeld on 14 October 1964. His longstanding trust in Henry Neufeld was enough for St. John to share his quest for the faith, his willingness to abandon those aspects of "Indian medicine" which were harmful. In the words of Henry Neufeld "after St. John's confession and after our discussion, we knelt right there in the workshop, prayed and St. John came to the faith."
As a means of nurturing his faith, St. John met with his colleague pastors and other Christians of Pauingassi to read the Scriptures from the Cree Bible (the Ojibwe / Anishinabe New Testament was first printed in July 1988), deliberate on the meanings, and pray for strength. As part of their itinerant ministry among Native communities of northern Canada, Henry Neufeld and his wife Elna regularly returned to Pauingassi to assist the local leaders and the congregation with Bible studies.
St. John Owen and his wife Mary continued to make their living in the traditional way by hunting, fishing, and gathering wild rice.
Author(s) | Menno Wiebe |
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Date Published | 1990 |
Cite This Article
MLA style
Wiebe, Menno. "Owen, St. John (b. 1916)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1990. Web. 24 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Owen,_St._John_(b._1916)&oldid=175416.
APA style
Wiebe, Menno. (1990). Owen, St. John (b. 1916). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 24 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Owen,_St._John_(b._1916)&oldid=175416.
Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 5, p. 665. All rights reserved.
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